¶ … Eyewitness Testimony and Memory Issues
When investigating and prosecuting crimes and other incidents, their can be a heavy level of reliance on eyewitness testimony to substantiate the facts that are suggested by other evidence and to fill in missing gaps in the story of the crime, accident, or other incident. This can be a problem, however, as two different eyewitness accounts of the same incident are likely to differ significantly in many ways, and even the same eyewitness can remember details differently at different intervals of time following the incident. This is due to the human function of memory: the differences between short- and long-term memory, the processes involved in creating and reinforcing memory, and various techniques that can be used to help bring out memories but are not always reliable. This paper will examine and explore many of the issues related to memory and eyewitness recall.
Short-term memory occurs when sensory information is stored temporarily for use in certain comparisons and decision-making processes, like holding information from the beginning of a sentence until you reach the end of a sentence so that the entire sentence makes sense (Georgia 2011). Short-term memory decays quickly, and within a few seconds things stored in short-term memory are either forgotten or moved into long-term memory (Georgia 2011). When new neural pathways are formed in order to store information in long-term memory, there is very little decay that actually occurs, meaning that everything that actually makes it to long-term memory is theoretically accessible for the rest of the brain's life (Georgia 2011). Things do not actually work quite as simply as theory suggests, however.
The first step of memory creation is called encoding, and...
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